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Horace John Fraser
Fraser was born in Girvin, Sask., Nov. 27, 1905. He graduated
from the University of Manitoba with a B.Sc. in chemistry and
a gold medal in science in 1925, received an M.Sc. in 1928, entered
Harvard University the same year and earned an M.A. and, in 1930,
a Ph.D. in economic geology.
For three years he worked with the International Nickel Company
of Canada but returned to academic life in 1935 when he became
assistant professor at the California Institute of Technology
where he remained for seven years.
After the United States entered the Second World War, Fraser went
to Washington in 1942 and was named assistant divisional chief
in charge of ferroalloys.
When the war ended, he returned to Canada and joined Ventures
in 1945. One of Ventures' subsidiaries was Falconbridge Nickel
Mines, and he was named its manager, eventually being elected
president and chief executive officer in 1957. In 1958, he became
president and managing director of Ventures. The two companies
were finally merged through his administrative skill and business
acumen.
When Fraser started with Falconbridge, it was a one-mine company.
During his years with the company, the Strathcona mine and mill
complex came on steam along with the Fecunis, Hardy, McKim and
Boundary mines. This was Falconbridge's greatest period of growth.
Perhaps the most significant of Fraser's ventures was his decision
to develop a ferronickel mining complex in the Dominican Republic.
He was aware of the potential of laterite deposits and his academic
background convinced him that the problems of extracting nickel
from such refractory ores could be solved. Under his direction,
the Dominican Republic's laterite nickel deposits were explored
extensively for 15 years while at the same time a research program
was embarked upon to develop a commercial process for treatment
of the nickel ores.
Although Fraser didn't live to see the mine's startup, he was
the driving force behind the formation of Falconbridge Dominicana
C. por A. which produces about 63 million pounds of ferronickel
each year.
Fraser was also committed to maintaining high standards of education
for the betterment of the country. He worked to ensure that Canada's
educational institutions received support and guidance from the
business community and served on the advisory council of engineering
at Queen's University. One of the guiding lights in the establishment
of Laurentian University in Sudbury, he became chairman of the
school's board of governors in 1965.
Fraser died in 1969.
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